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Mykulychyn
Rural locality in Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast, Ukraine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mykulychyn (Ukrainian: Микуличин) is a village in the Yaremche urban hromada of the Nadvirna Raion of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast in Ukraine.[1]
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History
The first written mention of the village was in 1412.[2]
On July 19, 2020, as a result of the administrative-territorial reform, the village became part of Nadvirna Raion.[3]
- Entrance to the village, before 1892
- Entrance to the town, before 1892
- Main road
- General view, before 1939
- Railway tunnel, before 1930
- Commune house, circa 1925
- House of Lviv academicians, 1939
- Orthodox church, 1914
- The bell tower, before 1939
- River Prut near Mykulychyn
- Hutsuls from Mykulychyn, 1901
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Religion
- Holy Trinity church with a bell tower (1868, wooden; architect Y. Chaikovetskyi, iconostasis painted by Kornylo Ustiyanovych, architectural monument of national importance; UGCC),[2]
- Church of the Ascension (2000s),[2]
- Monastery of the Congregation of Sisters Servants of the Immaculate Virgin Mary (1927, on the initiative of Metropolitan Andrey Sheptytsky).[2]
Notable residents
The village was visited by Ukrainian writers Vasyl Stefanyk and Bohdan Lepkyi, as well as in 1875 by publicist Mykhailo Drahomanov, in 1890 by English writer Ménie Muriel Dowie (she left a mention in her book "A Girl in the Carpa-thians", published in 1891), and in 1912 by the future emperor of Austria-Hungary Charles I and his wife. The writer Iryna Vilde lived there.[2]
References
Sources
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